Double Trouble in the Hudson River Estuary: Dominant Abiotic Factors
Controlling Harmful Algal Bloom Risk and the Compounding Influence of
the Invasive Water Chestnut
Abstract
Low-current tributary-estuaries and embayments along the margin of the
Hudson River are uniquely at risk for harmful algal blooms of
cyanobacteria (cyanoHABs) due to rising temperatures as a result of
climate change. An increased prevalence of cyanoHABs in near-shore,
low-current sections of the Hudson River could be extremely harmful to
nearby communities, aquatic organisms and wildlife. To address this
increased risk, it is imperative to understand the current in-stream and
upstream abiotic environmental controls (nutrients, water temperature,
etc.) on the current background levels of cyanobacteria within the
Hudson River. It is also important to understand how these controls and
cyanobacterial populations vary spatially with relation to the higher
risk, lower-flow sections along the margins of the Hudson River.
Locations of tributary-estuaries of special concern within the Hudson
Valley include Esopus Creek in Saugerties, Rondout Creek in Kingston,
and Wappingers Creek in Wappingers, NY. Other locations of concern are
embayments along the Hudson River such as Long Dock Park in Beacon, Port
Ewen in Kingston and Norrie Point in Staatsburg, NY. Given the
lower-flow nature of these sites, elevated surface water temperatures
are likely a result of settled, striated layers from decreased current.
These locations are also susceptible to growth of the invasive species
Trapa natans or commonly known as the European water chestnut. High
concentrations of nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorous within the
water chestnut bloom and the captured sunlight from metabolic processes
like photosynthesis can create an ideal microhabitat for harmful algae
like cyanobacteria. The background levels of cyanobacteria in outflows
of tributaries, and their lower-flow estuary extensions were observed
alongside the water quality within the water chestnut blooms of these
sites at varying depths. By studying the weekly changes in background
abundance of cyanobacteria and their drivers occurring at contrasting
locations along the Hudson River, it was found that the strongest
controls included turbidity, temperature and levels of phosphorous. In
locations of low turbidity and high surface water temperatures, the
background levels of cyanobacteria were higher in these lower-flow areas
than in areas with increased turbidity. Cyanobacteria was found in
greater number within water chestnut blooms than in whole water samples
outside the area of the bloom. High surface temperature and riverbed
temperature also related to higher levels of cyanobacteria. Given the
concluded information, it is apparent that invasive water chestnuts
within lower-flow extensions of the Hudson River hold a greater threat
than originally understood; creating an ideal habitat for potential
cyanoHABs in the wake of climate change.